By clicking “Accept,” you agree to the use of cookies and similar technologies on your device as set forth in our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy. Please note that certain cookies are essential for this website to function properly and do not require user consent to be deployed.

Susan Polgar

About the Author

Hungarian-born Susan Polgar is one of the most decorated female chess players ever. 
 
She was discovered as a child prodigy, when at age 4, she won the Budapest elementary school championship for girls with a perfect 10-0 sore. In 1984, at age 15, she became the youngest ever to earn the world #1 ranking. In 1986, she made history by qualifying for the Men’s World Championship but was not allowed to play due to her gender. In 1991, she broke the gender barrier again by being the first female in history to earn the Men’s Grandmaster title by norms and rating. She is the only player in history to earn all 6 of the world’s most prestigious chess crowns (world chess triple-crown, individual and team Olympiad gold, and world #1 ranking). She became the first player to ever play 1,131 consecutive games, winning 1,112 games while losing only 3! She also broke the record for 326 simultaneous games played with 309 wins, and the highest winning percentage (96.93%).

In addition to her storied career, Polgar founded the Susan Polgar Foundation, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization to promote chess, with all its educational, social and competitive benefits throughout the U.S., for young people of all ages, especially girls. After her professional playing career, she became the only woman to coach a men’s division I collegiate team (Texas Tech 2007-2012 and Webster University 2012-2021). Her teams in the past 10 years have won more world championships, national championships, major titles, and Olympiad medals than all other collegiate chess programs in the United States combined, including a record 7 consecutive final four championships, and 10 consecutive years as the #1 ranked team in the nation. In 2019 she was inducted to the U.S. Chess Hall of Fame, and the World Chess Hall of Fame in 2023, becoming the only woman to be inducted in both. Susan was the subject of a National Geographic documentary, entitled My Brilliant Brain.

By the Author